The kiddo decided what we should change up, with a little suggestion from me. See, this morning I bought a gallon of Grade B maple syrup. Oh yes, I did. I buy one every spring, and we were down to our last 1/4 cup or so of last year’s batch. So, it was time.

Last year’s batch might have been our second gallon of the year.

Maybe.

Anyway, that gallon of maple syrup was calling to me. So was the banana on the counter. And the almond butter in the fridge. Okay, maybe I gently prodded the kiddo in a few particular directions. So sue me.

He decided to go besan (course chickpea) flour. That was all him. I swear.

Anyway, our version turned out more like a sweet corn cake than a blondie. Anybody out there remember the sweet corn cake from ChiChi’s Mexican restaurant? Sort of gooey? Sort of grainy? WAY sweet? And an awful lot addictive? This is like the corn-free version of that. I know. Weird. But, good. Or, it would have been good back in the day when I ate at restaurants like ChiChi’s. Now, it’s a bit too sweet for my tastes.

The kiddo, on the other hand, gives it a thumbs up.

(And, for the life of me I couldn’t get a decent picture of these. *sigh* I swear my camera is refusing to focus these days.)

Preheat oven to 350°. Mash the banana in a medium bowl. Blend all ingredients until smooth. (It will look gritty.) Pour into a greased 8 x 8 pan. Bake for 25-30 minutes until edges are browned and top bounces back from slight pressure.

The drizzle on top is 1 T. of maple syrup + 2 t. cocoa powder. I wouldn’t have done that if it were not for the fact that I was filling my quart jug from my gallon jug and I overflowed the quart jug and caught the spillage in a bowl.

9 Responses to Genius Blondies – A Variation

Hey, Deanna, that both looks and sounds fantastic! No complaints here at all. 😉 I have all the ingredients except chickpea flour (have not tried that yet, but want to!). I might make these with almond flour and report back!

The original recipe had a can of chickpeas – so you could sub that (or any white bean) as well. Let me know what you think. (If I made them again for me, I’d cut the maple back to 1/2 a cup, at least.)